The discussion centers on the formation of binary stars and the concept of gravitational capture. It questions the assertion that conservation of energy prevents one object from capturing another under certain conditions. Participants explore scenarios where two non-bound objects can become gravitationally bound, emphasizing the necessity for energy loss in the process. The conversation highlights the need to identify mechanisms through which energy can be dissipated during such interactions. Understanding these dynamics is crucial for explaining binary star formation.
#1
Jarwulf
31
0
Hi, the wikipedia article on binary stars in the formation section claims that conservation of energy forbids a single object from capturing another. If this is true how so?
It is a consequence of the math ... try to find a situation where two objects are not gravitationally bound to each other but move into a position where they are gravitationally bound.
Basically, to do that, one or both objects has to lose energy ... where to?
Partial solar eclipse from Twizel, South Isl., New Zealand ...
almost missed it due to cloud, didnt see max at 0710 NZST as it went back into cloud.
20250922, 0701NZST
Canon 6D II 70-200mm @200mm,
F4, 100th sec, 1600ISO
Makeshift solar filter made out of solar eclipse sunglasses
Is a homemade radio telescope realistic?
There seems to be a confluence of multiple technologies that makes the situation better than when I was a wee lad: software-defined radio (SDR), the easy availability of satellite dishes, surveillance drives, and fast CPUs.
Let's take a step back - it is trivial to see the sun in radio. An old analog TV, a set of "rabbit ears" antenna, and you're good to go. Point the antenna at the sun (i.e. the ears are perpendicular to it) and there is...
This thread is dedicated to the beauty and awesomeness of our Universe. If you feel like it, please share video clips and photos (or nice animations) of space and objects in space in this thread. Your posts, clips and photos may by all means include scientific information; that does not make it less beautiful to me (n.b. the posts must of course comply with the PF guidelines, i.e. regarding science, only mainstream science is allowed, fringe/pseudoscience is not allowed).
n.b. I start this...